8 August 2012: Launch of 'Asgard' exhibition in National Museum

Jimmy Deenihan TD, Minister for Arts, Heritage and the Gaeltacht, launched the new permanent exhibition at the National Museum of Ireland, Collins Barracks entitled Asgard: The 1914 Howth Gun Running Vessel Conserved.

 

The iconic yacht Asgard was formerly owned by the British officer turned Irish nationalist and writer Erskine Childers, and his wife Molly. Asgard was built in 1905 by the famous Norwegian boat designer Colin Archer to the newly married couple’s specification. Its most famous voyage in 1914 was part of a gun-running expedition. In July 1914 Childers, his wife and a small crew arrived in Howth harbour north of Dublin, laden with a cargo of rifles from Germany to arm the Irish Volunteers. This gun-running expedition had been undertaken in response to the arming of the Ulster Volunteers by the Larne gun-running in April of that year.

 

Commenting on the launch of this important exhibition at the National Museum of Ireland, Minister Deenihan said ‘this launch is the culmination of five years of work, dedication, attention to detail and skill, all of which were vital components in the restoration and conservation of Asgard’.

 

‘The design and building of a yacht takes great technical ability as well as artistic skill. However, restoring a yacht that is over a century old, in a way that is sensitive to the original materials and designs, is an undertaking on a different level again. The task is even more complicated when the vessel is cherished as an item of national heritage’.

 

Asgard links us directly to the tumultuous times, a hundred years ago, when the futures of Ireland, the United Kingdom and Europe were about to change. The launch of this exhibition presents an opportunity to reflect on the complexities of the time and to remember Erskine Childers in the range of identities and roles – as a writer and sailor, as a soldier of the Empire who became an Irish Nationalist, and as a Republican that could not be reconciled to the outcome of the struggle, even as a member of the Treaty delegation’.

 

‘I hope that through scholarship and research in the coming years we will enhance our knowledge of the revolutionary age. I would like to acknowledge all that has been done to prepare this special exhibition and to thank all those involved. I will encourage everyone to come to see Asgard and the associated exhibition that tells her story and acknowledges the achievement of Erskine and Molly Childers and the other crew members’.

 

Learn about the Asgard exhibition here.

 

From History IrelandLar Joye on the Asgard’s cargo. 

 

Photos of the Event – Click to View

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